This wasn't quite following what the spec says for step 2:
"If index is −1, then remove the last element in the rows collection
from its parent, or do nothing if the rows collection is empty."
It was behaving like:
"If index is −1 and the rows collection is not empty, then remove the
last element in the rows collection from its parent."
Which is not the same, as it will fall into the "Otherwise" if
`index == -1` and the rows collection is empty and try and get the -2nd
element of the rows.
Found with Domato.
Step 1 of the spec is to capture the <script> element's node document
into a local variable.
When I originally implemented this, I thought this was not necessary.
However, I realised that the script that runs can adopt the current
script element into a different document, meaning step 5.4 and 6 then
operate on the incorrect document.
Covered by this WPT: 7b0ebaccc6/html/semantics/scripting-1/the-script-element/moving-between-documents-during-evaluation.html
This function initially returned a ByteBuffer, so `return {}` was fine.
It was then changed to return Optional<ByteBuffer>, so we accidentally
started returning an empty Optional instead. Explicitly specify the
constructor name to fix this.
Thanks to DexesTTP for catching this!
This is a simple implementation of SubtleCrypto.digest() using LibCrypto
under the hood, so it supports all the required hash functions:
SHA-1, SHA-256, SHA-384, SHA-512.
Two FIXMEs remain: doing the hashing "in parallel", and supporting an
object argument instead of a plain string.
Just some boilerplate code to get started :^)
This adds both the SubtleCrypto constructor to the window object, as
well as the crypto.subtle instance attribute.
This option is already enabled when building Lagom, so let's enable it
for the main build too. We will no longer be surprised by Lagom Clang
CI builds failing while everything compiles locally.
Furthermore, the stronger `-Wsuggest-override` warning is enabled in
this commit, which enforces the use of the `override` keyword in all
classes, not just those which already have some methods marked as
`override`. This works with both GCC and Clang.
Being really close to Object.prototype.valueOf() name wise makes this
unnecessarily confusing - while it sometimes serves as the
implementation of a valueOf() function, it's an abstraction which the
spec doesn't have.
Use the appropriate getters to retrieve specific internal slots instead,
most commonly [[FooData]] from the primitive wrapper objects.
For the Object class specifically, use the Value(Object*) ctor instead.
We now detect situations like this, where variables infinitely recur,
without crashing:
```css
div {
--a: var(--b);
--b: var(--a);
background: var(--a);
}
p {
--foo: var(--foo);
background: var(--foo);
}
```
We now stop processing variables once a length of 16384 tokens is
reached. This is an arbitrary number, but should be far beyond what
anyone will reasonably use, and small enough to not crash.
If a property is custom or contains a `var()` reference, it cannot be
parsed into a proper StyleValue immediately, so we store it as an
UnresolvedStyleValue until the property is compute. Then, at compute
time, we resolve them by expanding out any `var()` references, and
parsing the result.
The implementation here is very naive, and involves copying the
UnresolvedStyleValue's tree of StyleComponentValueRules while copying
the contents of any `var()`s it finds along the way. This is quite an
expensive operation to do every time that the style is computed.
This represents a property value that hasn't been converted to a
"proper" StyleValue yet. That is, it's either a custom property's value,
or a value that includes `var()` references, (or both!) since neither of
those can be fully resolved at parse time.
This allows document.implementation to keep the underlying document
alive for as long as we need it (for example, if someone holds on to a
DOMImplementation JS wrapper after the document is GC'd.)
The "completely finish loading" algorithm (from the HTML spec) is
responsible for sending a "load" event to nested browsing context
containers (iframes).
This patch removes the old mechanism for sending "load" events, which we
had mistakenly kept around, causing two events to be sent instead of
one. :^)
DOMImplementation.createDocument() should set the content type of the
newly created document, not replace the content type of the
DOMImplementation's own host document.
Now that we can serialize CSS tokens, we can just hold a string and then
re-parse it when the Supports is evaluated. This feels a little weird,
but it only happens once so it's not going to slow it down much, and it
keep the API cleaner.
This is `<general-enclosed>` in CSS grammar. It represents a section of
a `@media` or `@supports` rule that exists in some future standard that
we don't understand yet, but don't want to make the entire rule invalid.
There's not much that it can usefully do, but we store a string
representation of its contents so that it can be serialized out.
This changes allows for nested browser contexts to be embedded in the
serialized JSON of their container element (like `iframe`) and enables
their inspection in the DOM Inspector.